[4] Preservationist Eliza D. Simons Kammerer owned the house from the 1940s to the 1960s, conducting an extensive restoration of the interior.
[10] Author Edward Ball stayed at the Branford-Horry House while researching his 1998 book Slaves in the Family.
[7] He refers to the rooms as "moldering, the air thick and bacterial" with "peeling paint and water-stained plaster" and "beige stucco that was cracked and chipping.
"[7] The house was extensively rehabilitated in 2001-2002 "in a historically accurate manner, except modernizing kitchen and bathrooms.
This article about a property in Charleston County, South Carolina on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.